Alain Vigneault: Game 3 'must win'

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. -- New York Rangers coach Alain Vigneault knows his team can't afford to lose Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals to the Los Angeles Kings on Monday night at Madison Square Garden and fall into a 3-0 series hole.

"Tomorrow's as close to a must-(win) game as I think we can have," Vigneault said Sunday after his team landed at Westchester County Airport following a 5½-hour flight from Los Angeles.

"Until you face elimination, that's as close as we can get. ... There's a lot of good things that we're doing on the ice. There's a couple things that we need to clean up that we're going to address tomorrow with our group. But for the most part, we're given ourselves a real good chance, and that's what we're gonna try to do tomorrow."

"Obviously every game at this time of year is a must-win," third-line center Derick Brassard said. "And I think the guys, we're pretty excited for tomorrow. We've been playing with those guys every period. It's a pretty tight series. We're just gonna go out there tomorrow and play the way we've been playing."

The Rangers held a 2-0 lead in Game 1 and leads of 2-0, 3-1 and 4-2 in Game 2, but couldn't hold any of them. Still, other than the third period of Game 1, when his team was outshot 20-3, Vigneault has been happy with the Rangers' play. He just wished a couple of controversial calls would've went their way.

"I know they came back from a two-goal deficit again last night, but their third goal [when Los Angeles winger Dwight King might have interfered with New York goaltender Henrik Lundqvist on the play] you can look at it any way you want, but at the end of the day that shouldn't have been a goal in my opinion," Vigneault said. "They got three chances in the third if you count that one, and two of them went in and we were a little bit unlucky. We were playing really solid and sometimes stuff like that happens. I believe it's going to even out, and I believe we're going to win the next game."

Vigneault later said: "And then ... right before they scored the winning goal in double overtime, a lot of people seemed to think that we should've been on the power play. [Los Angeles defenseman Alec Martinez] flipped the puck out of the zone [and into the stands]. Instead of having a faceoff in the offensive zone, we should've had a faceoff going on the power play and we didn't. Those are the things that happen in playoff hockey. Usually they even themselves out and that's what we're gonna hope moving forward."

Monday night's game marks the first Stanley Cup finals game at Madison Square Garden since June 14, 1994, when the Rangers defeated the Vancouver Canucks, 3-2, in Game 7 to capture hockey's holy grail.

"Well, it's the biggest game that New York has had here in 20 years, so I think our fans are as excited as we are," Vigneault said. "People might be disappointed that we're down by two, but it obviously wasn't from lack of effort. We've played nine periods of hockey, and we've played some real solid hockey in there. It's a real good team. We know the challenge."